July 27, 2010
Pentagon: "Very Robust" Probe of WikiLeak Source
Spokesman Says Release of War Documents "Could Potentially Endanger Our Operations and Forces in Afghanistan"
(CBS) The Pentagon has launched a "very robust investigation" into the source of the leak of more than 90,000 classified documents on the war in Afghanistan, the release of which a spokesman said "could endanger the lives of our forces and imperil our nation's security."
Appearing on CBS' "The Early Show" this morning, Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said a probe into determining who leaked the documents to the website WikiLeaks, which published them on Sunday (in conjunction with The New York Times, the Guardian and Der Spiegel) is in its early stages."Our focus really, frankly, is to try to determine if there is anything in these 90,000 pages of documents that could indeed endanger our forces; we've got a team doing that round the clock," Morrell told anchor Erica Hill. "This was dumped on us like it was dumped on you all Sunday night.
"It would have been nice had this organization had the decency to come to us and work with us to try to figure out if there's anything in here that could endanger our forces. We were not given that luxury," he said.read more here
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
War Documents "Could Potentially Endanger Our Operations and Forces in Afghanistan
$8.7 billion in Iraqi funds missing
By The Associated Press
Tuesday, July 27th, 2010 -- 10:23 am
US audit finds weakness in Pentagon controls for Iraq funds; $8.7 billion missing.
The U.S. Defense Department is unable to properly account for over 95 percent of $9.1 billion in Iraqi oil money tapped by the U.S. for rebuilding the war ravaged nation, according to an audit released Tuesday.
The report by the U.S. Special Investigator for Iraq Reconstruction offers a compelling look at continued laxness in how such funds are being spent in a country where people complain basic services like electricity and clean water are sharply lacking seven years after the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.
The audit found that shoddy record keeping by the Defense Department left the Pentagon unable to fully account for $8.7 billion it withdrew between 2004 and 2007 from a special fund set up by the U.N. Security Council. Of that amount, Pentagon "could not provide documentation to substantiate how it spent $2.6 billion."
read more here
Pentagon account
The Dry Land outreach screeninngs
Over the next couple of months we will be screening the film at various military installations as well as in military communities with the hopes of bringing about a larger conversation about the issues soldiers and their families face as a result of a deployment. Here is a list of upcoming screenings.
July 1st, 2010 - Ft. Carson, CO - Read Article on Official Army Website - Carson Premieres Movie
RESOURCES FOR CARE
Veterans Suicide Prevention Hotline
Military One Source
Missing Sailor’s Body Found in Afghanistan
July 27, 2010 - 7:41 AM by: Conor Powell
KABUL- The body of one of the two U.S. sailors missing in Afghanistan has been found, according to U.S. officials.
A NATO press release said that the body was discovered in Eastern Afghanistan Sunday.
U.S. officials vowed to continue searching for the other missing sailor. A Taliban spokesman claims insurgents have captured the other sailor – whom U.S. officials have not identified.
According to the Associated Press, the Navy sailor killed was Justin McNealy, 30.
read more here and please don't forget there is still another sailor missing.
Missing Sailor Body Found in Afghanistan
New program rebuilding faces of soldiers, veterans
By MICHELLE ROBERTS (AP) – 2 hours ago
SAN ANTONIO — The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have brought a new kind of patient to the facial prothestics lab at the Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio: wounded warriors, who have recently suffered heavy burns and multiple traumas.
read more here
New program rebuilding faces of soldiers, veterans
Monday, July 26, 2010
What scientists know about PTSD in war veterans
Saturday, March 6, 2010
Are the troops just too young to go?
For the last few years I've been brining up the fact about re-deployments and the increase risk, along with screaming my fool head off there was nowhere near enough being done.
Well,in this one report you have it all and it's a wonderful thing. Now if the DOD and the VA would only come up with programs that work best and the cities and towns these veterans return home to step up, then we can really be proud of all we've learned through all these years.
EarthSky Health Interviews
Paula Schnurr on what scientists know about PTSD in war veterans
Post traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, is an anxiety disorder that affects up to 30% of soldiers returning from Iraq. That’s according to a June 2010 study by Army medical researchers. Its results were that: “Prevalence rates for PTSD or depression with serious functional impairment ranged between 8.5% and 14.0%, with some impairment between 23.2% and 31.1%.”
If you or someone you know is troubled by PTSD, go to The National Center for PTSD for help.
For the latest on what scientists know about PTSD, EarthSky spoke with Paula Schnurr. She’s deputy executive director of the VA’s National Center for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. She said PTSD involves changes in a person’s psychological state and their neurobiological state
Paula Schnurr: That is, their brain changes. The systems in the brain that help us deal with stress and regulate fear and emotional responding are changed as you might expect in response to the extreme trauma of combat.Paula Schnurr: One factor is the person’s age. Up to early adulthood, the younger a person is, the more likely they are to develop PTSD. The more education they have, the less likely. If they’ve had childhood stressors and trauma, they’re more likely. The way that I think about it, at least, is that part of what a person has to do when a person has experienced a trauma is to try to make sense of it. And a person who’s had more education, who is a little bit older, would have greater cognitive abilities to try to make meaning out of this horrible event.
Another thing scientists know, said Schnurr, is that the more severe the exposure, the greater the risk of PTSD.
Paula Schnurr: One of the more significant findings of this war is how multiple deployments matters. So we’ve had some military personnel who’ve been deployed three, perhaps even four times. These individuals are at particular risk because they’ve essentially experienced more and more severe trauma.read the rest here
Re-Branding the VFW's
Patt Cottingham
Patt Cottingham has been working as a brand communication strategist for the past ten years.
Posted: July 26, 2010
In World World I, World War II, and Korea returning veterans used the VFW's as clubs to meet socially, have a drink, and contribute to the communities they were in. They were
at Memorial Day ceremonies, Fourth of July parades, and Veterans Day functions. They also served to help returning veterans get their needed benefits. All well and good.
However it was the Vietnam Veterans where the VFW started to lose membership. One returning veteran from Vietnam remembered it this way "When I returned from Viet Nam we were not exactly welcomed with open arms at the VFW. I was actually mocked that I really didn't serve in a "real war" as the stalwarts of the post claimed. Needless to say there has been a huge disconnect between the VFW and me. I still smart from that remark."
Here are some statistics that illustrate the daunting challenges the VFW's are having nationwide. Today the VFW posts have 1.6 million members. Of that number 495,000 are older than 82, 300,00 are older than 72 (and younger than 82). Less than 10 percent are younger than 50. The numbers are setting a coarse for oblivion unless the VFW's become more relevant to the returning soldiers of Iraq and Afghanistan.
Fast forward to the soldiers fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan.We now live in the era of YouTube and Facebook. Soldiers can upload videos, share stories on social networking sites. Talk with family and friends and capture images to send back home via cell phones. These wars have become more up close and personal than ever before. The other difference in these wars is the women who are serving. About 200,000 women have now served in Iraq and Afghanistan. These women are front-line, rifle-carrying combat personnel. Which means they are now suffering the same devastating mental and physical wounds of male soldiers.
read more here
Re Branding the VFW
How You Can Use Crises to Transform Your Life
It's really hard to get through hard times when things don't seem to be getting any better. Yet when you look back at other hard times you've faced, one thing stands out, those bad days didn't destroy you because you're still here.
Looking back, faith gave me hope and hope got me from one day to the next no matter what the crisis was. I turned the heartache of watching my husband suffer with PTSD and all that did to my family, into something positive. Helping veterans and their families get through their own pain. What you see on this blog is part of what I do. Tracking reports across the country makes it impossible for anyone to think this is not a national problem. The videos are part of it. Putting in my two cents on essays is part, but then there are the emails and heartbreaking stories leading up to emails when other families come thru the worst of times just like we did.
If you measure success by money, then I am an absolute failure, but if you measure it by lives saved, families held together and proving hope to other people, then I guess you could say I have succeeded. On the grand scale of things, I'm just a nobody, ignored by a lot of powerful groups no matter how hard I try to get them to just listen. Yet on a human level, I talk to some of the most magnificent people you'd ever want to meet.
Right now there is a couple involved with a ministry. He is a veteran trying to heal from PTSD and the wife is a Godsend to him, standing by his side and trying to do whatever she can to help him heal better. All they want is to take what this crisis has done and turn it into a positive outcome by helping other families and especially veterans.
There was a Vietnam veteran, outcast from everyone he knew yet all he wants to do is get better and stronger so that he can help other veterans.
These people are simply amazing. They didn't want to give up and they certainly didn't want to give in. Neither do I. Reading the advice from Tony Robbins may seem like just publicity for his new show but when you think of the gift he has to offer, let him publicize it all he wants because he's giving a lot more than others have.
A Chance to Break Through: How You Can Use Crises to Transform Your Life
Arianna Huffington and Tony Robbins
Posted: July 26, 2010
A month ago, when Tony Robbins was passing through New York, we met for a drink. In the course of our conversation, we realized that -- from our different perspectives -- we both had been thinking about a similar problem: how can people faced with enormous challenges carry on without collapsing under the burden?
I had just finished my upcoming book on Third World America in which I write about the millions of middle class Americans who are suddenly finding themselves without a job, or without a home, or without the possibility of giving their children a better future. By the end of the book, I found myself consumed with identifying practical solutions and sources of help that those struggling could use right away -- instead of anxiously waiting for government to act. And I recognized that it all starts with each individual's inner strength and resilience.
Tony, meanwhile, had been working on "Breakthrough with Tony Robbins," a series of primetime TV specials for NBC focused on the stories of people who had been dealt an incredibly bad hand by life. He showed me a clip and I was not just deeply moved but, more the point, I was struck by how these people were able to find the strength to transform their lives -- even in the most extreme circumstances.
The clip I saw was about a newlywed who jumps into a swimming pool on his wedding day, hits his head, and instantly becomes a quadriplegic. When we first encounter them in Tony's special, premiering tomorrow night, he and his wife are trapped in their house -- the wife feeling depressed and angry; the husband feeling guilty and at a loss for what to do. The transformation in this couple's lives that we see by the end of the hour is stunning -- and I knew it would be really inspiring for anyone going through difficult circumstances of their own (most of which, of course, would pale in comparison to becoming a quadriplegic).
By the end of our meeting, Tony and I had decided do something on HuffPost that would focus on solutions instead of problems. The result is Breakthrough: The Power of Crisis, which launches today.
read more here
How You Can Use Crises to Transform Your Life
President Obama to speak at disabled veterans convention
By Rick Maze - Staff writer
Posted : Thursday Jul 22, 2010 16:30:22 EDT
President Obama will speak Aug. 2 in Atlanta at the national convention of Disabled America Veterans, an election-year appearance where he will point to a long list of accomplishments made by his administration in improving veterans’ programs, White House officials said Thursday.
Obama’s appearance will come on the third day of the four-day annual convention of one of the nation’s biggest veterans groups. DAV has worked closely with the administration on many issues, but it remains critical of difficulties facing veterans who are trying to receive benefits and treatment for service-connected disabilities.
Testifying in June before the House Veterans’ Affairs Committee about problems with processing veterans’ disability claims, DAV’s national legislative director, Joseph Violante, gave the Obama administration credit for trying to improve things even though the backlog of claims continues to grow.
“There are reasons to be optimistic,” Violante said. “Over the past six months, with mounting pressure from DAV and other veterans’ service organizations, there has been a welcome increase in attention from Congress and the administration” to problems with claims, he said.
Obama will not be the first president to appear before DAV. President Clinton spoke to the group in 1996 in New Orleans, and President Ford spoke in 1976 at the dedication of DAV’s national service center and legislative headquarters in Washington, D.C.read more here
Gold Star family group no one wants to have to join
As hard as it is for most of these families, the families left behind because of suicide find it ever harder to find support from people they depend on the most. Gold Star families can be their lifeline.
Event connects Gold Star Families, kin of those who died in military service
By Rick Rojas
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, July 25, 2010
An indescribable pain consumes two Maryland mothers as they approach the anniversaries of their entrance into a network of families they hoped never to join: those with children killed in war.
On Aug. 5, 2006, Deborah Higgins buried her first-born son, Lance Cpl. James W. Higgins, 22, after he was killed in Iraq days shy of returning home. Two years earlier, on Aug. 5, Linda Faulstich received word that her son, Army Spec. Raymond J. Faulstich Jr., 24, died in Iraq that day after his convoy was attacked.
The deaths forever altered their lives. Faulstich, 60, of Leonardtown said she often wondered whether there would come a time when she could be happy again.
When her son died, Faulstich said, friends stopped calling. People tried to avoid talking about her son. She even fell out of touch with her mother, who told her that talking to her dredged up memories of Raymond.
"I had a feeling people thought I was going overboard with it," Faulstich said.
What helped her cope were other parents in the same situation. She found that the only ones who could understand her plight were the mothers and fathers who had been through it themselves, losing a son or daughter to war.
Gold Star Family is a generic term to describe relatives of military personnel who died during service. When Faulstich would pick up the phone and call another Gold Star mother, there was no pretense, no emotions to struggle to explain.
"It's an exclusive club that no one wants to be eligible for," she said.
read more here
Event connects Gold Star Families